History notes
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Mike Sciacca
When you engage Chris Epting in conversation, you soon learn that
the Huntington Harbour resident has an affinity for history.
You also discover that he has a keen awareness, an eye for detail
and a sharp mind that can recall things that have had some type of
social impact.
Epting has made it his passion to remind others of such noteworthy
events, bridging events of yesteryear and making them relevant to
today. He has done so through two recently published books.
His latest published work is titled “Images of America -- The Los
Angeles Memorial Coliseum.” The book chronicles through words and
archival photographs the history of the venerated stadium and some of
the events that took place inside its hallowed walls.
The book comes on the heels of his first venture, “Images of
America -- Huntington Beach,” which was released last year.
“After the book on Huntington Beach was completed, I was bitten by
the bug,” said Epting, 40, who, for 18 years worked as a writer and
creative director in an advertising agency.
He has since opened up the Surf City Advertising Company.
“I always had wanted to focus on writing outside of advertising
and owning my own company has allowed me the chance to manage my own
time and work on these projects,” he said. While working on “Images
of America -- Huntington Beach,” Epting discovered that Surf City had
pretty much gone undocumented.
He had pitched the book to a publishing company in Chicago, and
they gave Epting the green light to document Huntington Beach through
archival and up-to-date photographs.
The result was a 128-page book that contains nearly 200 images,
150 of which are from city archives. Epting took the others.
The book features before and after sections. In it, Epting
displays original photographs of various city landmarks. In each
instance, he went out and found the site where the original photo may
have been taken and then photographed that landmark to show how the
it looks in the present day.
“It was really cool to find these old photos, some that were as
old as 60 to 70 years old,” he said. “There’s a shot of the old train
station downtown and one of the old, original wooden pier. There are
some amazing shots in the book.”
His first published work is now in its fourth printing.
Epting admits to being a sports stadium buff. Once the Huntington
Beach project was complete, he went to work on his next book.
The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum had always held a fascination
for the East Coast native.
“As a kid, I’d see the Coliseum on TV and in the movies, and there
was something about it that always appealed to me,” he said. “When I
finally got to see it for the first time, in the late 1980s, my jaw
dropped.”
Since that first, unforgettable visit, Epting said, he has been to
the Coliseum at least 100 times. He still gets goose bumps when he’s
there.
“I can’t explain it. It was a somewhat crumbling stadium, but I
knew that events of great importance went on inside its walls,” he
said. “Of course, there were the great sporting events, but
non-sports events, such as speeches, concerts and religious services,
also took place there.
“The Coliseum really was more than a football stadium -- for its
first few decades it really was a cultural center,” he said.
“Eisenhower, Patton, Billy Graham, even Evil Knievel, were big
headliners there. It was used for ski jumping and war maneuvers and
of course, the Olympics. I cover all of this in the book.”
Epting needed a vote of approval from the Coliseum Commission to
gain access to the Coliseum and its archives.
He received the commission’s blessing after a nearly six-month
wait and then went to work.
He was allowed to walk the stadium’s hallowed field and travel its
tunnels. He was even given a key to the stadium’s door if he needed
access when nobody was home.
Margaret Farnum, the Coliseum’s chief administrating officer, who
has worked for the stadium the past 33 years, praised Epting’s
dedication to the book.
The book took six months to complete and went into bookstores in
September. It is 128 pages and has 220 photos, 40 of which were taken
by Epting.
“His love of this stadium really paralleled mine,” Farnum said.
“He was a relentless worker and is an excellent historian. Chris’
book turned out beautifully and really captured the spirit of the
grand, historic Coliseum.”
Epting is close to finishing his next book, titled “James Dean
Died Here: The Locations of America’s Pop Culture Landmarks.” The
book is planned for release next spring, he said.
After that, he plans to begin work on a book about his true
passion: baseball.
“My hope is that these books compel people to remember a little
bit about history, to see the way things were in comparison to how
they are now,” Epting said.
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